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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Raltegravir treatment effects on progressive feline leukemia virus

By Boesch, Andrea et al.·Published in Veterinary microbiology·2015·Vetsuisse Faculty·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of the effect of short-term treatment with the integrase inhibitor raltegravir (Isentress) on the course of progressive feline leukemia virus infection.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats infected with feline leukemia virus (FeLV) were treated with a medication called raltegravir to see if it could help reduce the virus in their bodies. Over nine weeks, the cats received the medication twice a day, and while it was well tolerated and significantly lowered the virus levels, the effects didn’t last long after treatment stopped. Only one cat developed antibodies against the virus, and the others still showed decreased virus levels after treatment ended. Unfortunately, one untreated cat developed severe anemia and died shortly after being infected. This study suggests that while raltegravir can help reduce FeLV, it doesn't completely eliminate the virus, and more research is needed to find better treatments.

People also search for: cat feline leukemia treatment · raltegravir for cats · FeLV symptoms in cats

Abstract

Cats persistently infected with the gammaretrovirus feline leukemia virus (FeLV) are at risk to die within months to years from FeLV-associated disease, such as immunosuppression, anemia or lymphoma/leukemia. The integrase inhibitor raltegravir has been demonstrated to reduce FeLV replication in vitro. The aim of the present study was to investigate raltegravir in vivo for its safety and efficacy to suppress FeLV replication. The safety was tested in three naïve specified pathogen-free (SPF) cats during a 15 weeks treatment period (initially 20mg then 40mg orally b.i.d.). No adverse effects were noted. The efficacy was tested in seven persistently FeLV-infected SPF cats attained from 18 cats experimentally exposed to FeLV-A/Glasgow-1. The seven cats were treated during nine weeks (40mg then 80mg b.i.d.). Raltegravir was well tolerated even at the higher dose. A significant decrease in plasma viral RNA loads (∼5×) was found; however, after treatment termination a rebound effect was observed. Only one cat developed anti-FeLV antibodies and viral RNA loads remained decreased after treatment termination. Of note, one of the untreated FeLV-A infected cats developed fatal FeLV-C associated anemia within 5 weeks of FeLV-A infection. Moreover, progressive FeLV infection was associated with significantly lower enFeLV loads prior to infection supporting that FeLV susceptibility may be related to the genetic background of the cat. Overall, our data demonstrate the ability of raltegravir to reduce viral replication also in vivo. However, no complete control of viremia was achieved. Further investigations are needed to find an optimized treatment against FeLV. (250 words).

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25500005/